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E-grāmata: Saunders Mac Lane: A Mathematical Autobiography [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Dec-2019
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429064784
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 257,91 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 368,44 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 376 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Dec-2019
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429064784
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Saunders Mac Lane was an extraordinary mathematician, a dedicated teacher, and a good citizen who cared deeply about the values of science and education. In his autobiography, he gives us a glimpse of his "life and times," mixing the highly personal with professional observations. His recollections bring to life a century of extraordinary accomplishments and tragedies that inspire and educate. Saunders Mac Lane's life covers nearly a century of mathematical developments. During the earlier part of the twentieth century, he participated in the exciting happenings in Göttingen---the Mecca of mathematics. He studied under David Hilbert, Hermann Weyl, and Paul Bernays and witnessed the collapse of a great tradition under the political pressure of a brutal dictatorship. Later, he contributed to the more abstract and general mathematical viewpoints developed in the twentieth century. Perhaps the most outstanding accomplishment during his long and extraordinary career was the development of the concept of categories, together with Samuel Eilenberg, and the creation of a theory that has broad applications in different areas of mathematics, in particular topology and foundations. He was also a keen observer and active participant in the social and political events. As a member and vice president of the National Academy of Science and an advisor to the Administration, he exerted considerable influence on science and education policies in the post-war period. Mac Lane's autobiography takes the reader on a journey through the most important milestones of the mathematical world in the twentieth century.
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xv
Part One Early Years
1(62)
Chapter 1 Heresy
3(10)
Chapter 2 High School
13(8)
Chapter 3 Undergraduate at Yale
21(10)
Chapter 4 Universal Knowledge and New Knowledge
31(4)
Chapter 5 The University of Chicago, 1930
35(8)
Chapter 6 Germany 1931-33
43(20)
Part Two First Teaching
63(28)
Chapter 7 Yale and Harvard
65(10)
Chapter 8 Cornell and Chicago
75(6)
Chapter 9 Surveying Modern Algebra
81(2)
Chapter 10 Algebraic Functions
83(4)
Chapter 1 First Graduate Students
87(4)
Part Three Collaborative Research
91(20)
Chapter 12 Crossed Product Algebras and Group Extension
93(6)
Chapter 13 Eilenberg Enters
99(6)
Chapter 14 Naturality
105(6)
Part Four The War Years
111(12)
Chapter 15 Much More Applied Math
113(4)
Chapter 16 Cynthia Enters
117(2)
Chapter 17 War Research: Roll, Pitch, and Yaw
119(4)
Part Five Eilenberg and Mac Lane
123(10)
Chapter 18 Cautiously Publishing Category Theory
125(2)
Chapter 19 The Cohomology of Groups
127(4)
Chapter 20 Eilenberg-Mac Lane Spaces
131(2)
Part Six Harvard Years
133(32)
Chapter 21 Professor at Harvard
135(6)
Chapter 22 University Presidents
141(2)
Chapter 23 Jib and Mainsail
143(4)
Chapter 24 Dorothy
147(8)
Chapter 25 Have Guggenheim, Will Travel
155(10)
Part Seven Chicago in the Fifties
165(30)
Chapter 26 Return to Chicago
167(4)
Chapter 27 The Stone Age at Chicago
171(6)
Chapter 28 The Stone Age Comes to an End
177(6)
Chapter 29 Hutchins and the University
183(6)
Chapter 30 The College Mathematics Staff"
189(2)
Chapter 31 Univeral Algebra and Think Tanks
191(4)
Part Eight Mathematical Developments
195(30)
Chapter 32 Mathematical Organizations
197(4)
Chapter 33 Bourbaki-the Legend
201(4)
Chapter 34 The New Math
205(4)
Chapter 35 Categories Expand
209(2)
Chapter 36 The Grand Tour of Europe, 1954
211(8)
Chapter 37 Paris and Cartan. 1955-56
219(6)
Part Nine National Academy of Science
225(10)
Chapter 38 Membership in the National Academy of Sciences
227(2)
Chapter 39 The National Research Council
229(4)
Chapter 40 The Academy Proceedings
233(2)
Part Ten The Sixties and Beyond
235(18)
Chapter 41 Homological Algebra
237(2)
Chapter 42 Categories: La Jolla & Columbia
239(4)
Chapter 43 Geometrical Mechanics
243(2)
Chapter 44 Outdoors on the Indiana Dunes
245(4)
Chapter 45 Categories at Work
249(4)
Part Eleven National Science Policy
253(38)
Chapter 46 As President of the AMS
255(4)
Chapter 47 Academy Reports
259(6)
Chapter 48 George Kistiakowski
265(2)
Chapter 49 Report Review
267(12)
Chapter 50 The National Science Board
279(8)
Chapter 51 Science Policy
287(4)
Part Twelve Travels
291(16)
Chapter 52 Visits to China
293(6)
Chapter 53 Anniversary at the Dunes, 1983
299(4)
Chapter 54 Dorothy's Delights
303(4)
Part Thirteen Advising
307(16)
Chapter 55 Chicago Graduate Students
309(8)
Chapter 56 Friends and Mentors
317(2)
Chapter 57 Rating Research
319(2)
Chapter 58 The NAS Research Roundtable
321(2)
Part Fourteen Later Developments
323(14)
Chapter 59 The Philosophy of Mathematics
325(2)
Chapter 60 Second Marriage
327(6)
Chapter 61 International Category Conferences
333(4)
Part Fifteen Contemplating
337(16)
Chapter 62 Mathematics Departments
339(6)
Chapter 63 Collaborative Research
345(4)
Chapter 64 Career Choice: Inheritance of Precision?
349(4)
Index 353
Mac Lane, Saunders